The day before the most uncertain parliamentary elections in Great Britain after many decades, the leaders of the three main parties will do their best to win over undecided voters in the very final of the pre-election race and ensure the highest possible turnout of their supporters.
The latest polls hint at a "dead race" between the two largest parties - the ruling Conservatives led by Prime Minister David Cameron and the opposition Labor Party of Ed Miliband, but also show that neither party will win an absolute majority.
Cameron will once again promise the British today that he will keep the country "on the path to a brighter future", while Miliband will advocate for "a government that will put working people first", and the leader of the third favorite, the Liberal Democratic Party, Nick Clegg will offer "stability and a decent standard of living," reports the BBC.
Leading party leaders are crisscrossing the length and breadth of the country to secure support at the polls tomorrow, with Cameron hitting the north-west of England, Scotland and the Midlands, while Miliband is visiting the Conservative-ruled fringes of the north of England and Clegg the Scottish counties he hopes to will keep.
Whether Britain will leave the European Union and whether Scotland will once again raise the question of independence could depend on the outcome of the vote in the general election for the 56th parliament in the world's fifth largest economy.
Cameron's Conservative Party is tied, according to the results of the survey published yesterday, with its main rival, Miliband's Labor Party, and both have 34 percent of voter support, one percent more each, compared to the previous poll published on May 1.
The Liberal Democrats, partners in the ruling coalition, enjoy the support of 10 percent of Britons, an increase of one percent, and the Eurosceptic United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) has the favor of 13 percent of voters, recording a drop of two percent compared to the previous survey.
The two leading contenders, Cameron and Miliband, are playing different cards in the pre-election offensive - while the Conservative Party focuses on tax cuts, the main trump card of the Labor Party is preventing the privatization of the National Health Service.
Cameron promises stability and a strong government if he remains in power, warning voters that if they choose Miliband, they will face chaos and a stall in the economic recovery with blackmail from the Scottish National Party.
AP predicts that, if Cameron does not win a second term as prime minister, he will almost certainly lose his status as Tory leader.
The American agency states that since the British elect a party and MPs, but do not directly elect the head of government, Miliband could find himself at the head of the country, although he is shy and reluctant to appear in front of TV cameras.
Polls open at 22am and close at XNUMXpm, but uncertainty about the outcome is likely to last for days.
The election in Britain could also be a kind of referendum on austerity, as the economy, along with the question of whether people think they are moving in the right direction, quickly became the main focus of the election campaign.
The upcoming elections could affect Britain's stay in the EU and, in the future, the fate of the country itself, i.e. Scotland's stay in Britain.
Cameron promised a referendum on remaining in the EU, while Miliband is against a referendum, and as it is unlikely that either of the two main parties in the election race will win an absolute majority, the result will be a coalition government in which the Liberal Democratic Party could re-enter. which has so far opposed the referendum, but has softened its stance in recent days.
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